Asteroid-Bound OSIRIS-REx Set to Begin New Quest for Life’s Origins

The ambitious seven-year mission will visit the asteroid Bennu and bring back samples scientists think might contain the building blocks of Earthlife.

This artist’s concept shows the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft contacting the asteroid Bennu. The mission aims to return a sample of Bennu’s surface coating to Earth for study as well as return detailed information about the asteroid and it’s trajectory. Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center

The countdown has begun for NASA’s OSIRIS-REx mission. It is set to visit an asteroid, pick up a sample and bring it back to Earth.

The Origins, Spectral Interpretation, Resource Identification, Security, Regolith Explorer (OSIRIS-REx) is a part of NASA’s New Frontiers Program. It is the third mission to be selected as a part of this programme, after Juno to Jupiter and New Horizons to Pluto and beyond. The team behind OSIRIS-REx includes scientists from France, Germany, Italy, the UK, the US and Canada.

The mission was selected to sample the asteroid named 101955 Bennu, commonly called as just Bennu, orbiting the Sun very close to Earth. Unlike typical asteroids, such as the ones floating around in the belt between Mars and Jupiter, Bennu orbits the Sun in an orbit nearly the same as Earth’s. In fact, it’s so close to us that the 500-metre-wide rock’s orbit will bring it within the Moon’s orbit in 2135. It is also classified as a ‘potentially hazardous object’ because it just might smash into Earth someday. But you can breathe easy for now: scientists think that day is at least 300 years away.

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Bennu was selected to be the target because it is distinctively black and carbonaceous, an indication that it holds organic compounds we are interested in. Such asteroids are essentially remnants from the early Solar system, debris thrown out during the formation of the Sun and the planets. Their composition is thought to have been unchanged through billions of years. These remnants also suffer minimal space weathering –effects of radiation, high energy rays, and solar wind – and therefore hold a perfect record of conditions that existed when Earth formed. Scientists believe they contain amino acids and sugars, chemical compounds presumed to be the primary building blocks for life on Earth. These compounds have also been found in meteorites before.

All this means that scientists believe analysing the likes of Bennu could give us great insights into the formation of the Solar System and whether space-rocks might have played a significant role in seeding our planet with life.

If that’s true, would we technically be aliens ourselves?

The mission objectives for OSIRIS-REx are: